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Saturday, December 4, 2010

Gaza-bound aid team stopped at Attari border

Attari (Punjab), Dec 4 (IANS) A group of 34 Indians on a humanitarian visit to Gaza as part of an Asian outreach initiative were stopped here by Indian authorities Saturday despite having valid visas, organizers said.

The organizers said the ministry of external affairs had not responded to their request for permission to cross over to Pakistan even though it was sought a month back.

'We are deeply disappointed at the decision of the Indian government and it may just end up sending a wrong message about the Indian commitment to the Palestinian people,' said Ashim Roy, one of the team members.

The team staged a sit-in here Saturday to protest the delay.

Under the banner of Asian People's Solidarity for Palestine (APSP), the group was flagged off from Delhi Thursday and are carrying medicines and humanitarian aid worth Rs.35 lakh.

They will be traveling across Pakistan, Iran, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and attempt to break through the Israeli blockade and enter Gaza Dec 27, the anniversary of the 2008 Gaza conflict.

They will be joined by around 400 activists from other Asian countries like Nepal, Japan, Afghanistan, Malaysia, Sri Lanka and Turkmenistan during the 'Asian Land Convoy to Gaza' trip.

The trip has been facing trouble from the start as the Pakistan High Commission had earlier refused to issue visas citing security concerns.

It finally relented after intense parlaying from both sides of the border, but issued visas to only 34 of the 60 members.

Source: Sify.
Link: http://sify.com/news/gaza-bound-aid-team-stopped-at-attari-border-news-national-kmesOndjiif.html.

كأس الخليج بين الكويت والسعودية

4/12/2010 م

يسدل الستار غدا الأحد على منافسات كأس الخليج العشرين لكرة القدم التي تستضيفها اليمن حيث يلتقي منتخبا الكويت والسعودية علما بأنهما كانا قد التقيا ضمن المجموعة الأولى للدور الأول وتعادلا بلا أهداف.

وتشكل مواجهات الفريقين ما يشبه "الدربي" في الكرة الخليجية نظرا للتنافس الكبير بينهما منذ سنوات عدة، فضلا عن ما حققه المنتخبان من إنجازات على الصعيدين الخليجي والقاري.

ويتفوق الكويتيون خليجيا بفوزهم بالبطولة تسع مرات وهو رقم قياسي مقابل ثلاث للسعودية، كما حققوا سبعة انتصارات في اللقاءات المباشرة مقابل أربعة للسعودية وسبعة تعادلات، علما بأن الفريقين ابتعدا عن ألقاب النسخ الثلاث الماضية التي فازت بها قطر والإمارات وعمان على التوالي.

في المقابل يتفوق السعوديون إقليميا وعالميا حيث تأهل "الأخضر" لكأس العالم أربع مرات أعوام 1994 و1998 و2002 و2006 مقابل مرة "للأزرق" عام 1982، كما فاز بكأس آسيا ثلاث مرات أعوام 1984 و1988 و1996 مقابل مرة للكويت عام 1980.

مشوار الفريقين

وبدأت الكويت مشوارها في خليجي 20 بالفوز على قطر 1-صفر ثم تعادلت مع السعودية من دون أهداف وفازت على اليمن 3-صفر، ثم تخطت الدور نصف النهائي بالفوز على العراق 5-4 بركلات الترجيح بعد انتهاء الوقتين الأصلي والإضافي بالتعادل 2-2.

في المقابل بدأت السعودية مشوارها بالفوز على اليمن 4-صفر ثم التعادل مع الكويت والفوز على قطر 2-1، ثم فازت في نصف النهائي على الإمارات 1-صفر.

تصريحات المدربين

وفي المؤتمر الصحفي الذي عقد في اليمن، حرص الصربي غوران توفازيتش مدرب الكويت على الإشادة بالفريق السعودي، لكنه قال إن لاعبيه جاهزون لمواجهة الأخضر وإيقاف خطورته، مشيرا إلى أن مرمى فريقه لم يتلق إلا هدفين فقط في أربع مباريات.

من جانبه أكد البرتغالي جوزيه بيسيرو مدرب السعودية أن فريقه الذي يضم العديد من العناصر الجديدة مصر على الفوز بمباراة الغد، مع توقعه بأنها ستكون صعبة وقوية ومثيرة.

المصدر: الجزيرة.
الرابط: http://www.aljazeera.net/NR/EXERES/EFABC480-D5CF-446C-B668-0EB2C2A43E00.htm.

فنانون معاقون يعرضون أعمالهم بليبيا

4/12/2010 م

خالد المهير-طرابلس

قدمت وفود عشر دول عربية، بالإضافة إلى وفد بريطاني أمس بمدينة طرابلس الليبية، عروضا فنية وعلمية ورياضية وإبداعية تعكس قدرات شريحة من مختلف أنواع الإعاقات الذهنية والذهنية الشديدة والشلل الرباعي والمكفوفين والصم، وذلك في معرض التفوق الدولي الرابع للأشخاص ذوي الإعاقة بمناسبة اليوم العالمي للمعاقين.

وقال منسق اللجنة التحضيرية أبو بكر الأنصاري إن الفعاليات التي قدمها المشاركون فندت وصف هذه الشريحة بأنهم من ذوي الاحتياجات. وأضاف في تصريح للجزيرة نت أن أفراد هذه الشريحة لهم قدرات خاصة ومتميزة رغم حجم العراقيل الكبيرة في مجال البنية التحتية وفي الأماكن العامة.

وكشف الأنصاري أن جهات ليبية أهلية وحكومية ساندت هذه الجهود، وقال إن شخصيات تبرعت لإيفاد متميزين إلى عدة دول لتقديم عروضهم المستقبلية، مؤكدا أن العام المقبل سيشهد تزايد المشاركات التي قد تصل لعشرين مشاركة عربية ودولية.

وساهمت في تنظيم المعرض دوائر حكومية وأهلية، ومتطوعون من مختلف المدن الليبية برعاية الاتحاد الليبي لرياضات الأشخاص ذوي الإعاقة.
ولفت الأنصاري إلى أنه "لم يكن يتصور أن أفكارهم على الورق تتحول إلى واقع ملموس اليوم" معتبرا هذا الحشد في الجماهيرية رسالة صريحة مفادها أن المشاركين لهم قدرات تؤهلهم للتميز.

ونقل الوفد الفلسطيني صورة عن تزايد حجم الإعاقات بعد الحرب الإسرائيلية الأخيرة على قطاع غزة. وقال أمين جمعية الآجاد الخيرية في غزة عاهد الخطيب للجزيرة نت إن مشاركته جاءت بهدف إيصال صوت المعاق الفلسطيني إلى الحكومات والمؤسسات العربية.

قضية شعب

وتحدث جهاد الغول -وهو طالب فلسطيني بترت ساقه عند خروجه من المؤسسة التعليمية التي يدرس بها أثناء قصف إسرائيلي- عن واقعهم في ظل الاحتلال، ولاقت عروضه استحسان الجمهور المحلي والعربي.

ويحمل الغول قضية شعبه تحت الاحتلال، وقال بحديث للجزيرة نت إن الفن الذي يمارسه "لم يعد هواية" بل رسالة تجسد واقع المجتمع الفلسطيني.

كما شارك الفنان الفلسطيني الأصم محمد الخالدي بعرض الخزفيات الفلسطينية المستوحاة من التراث الشعبي. وعرضت الفنانة التشكيلية الليبية زهرة البيباص سبع لوحات تجريدية وتعبيرية وواقعية قامت برسمها بالفم.

ويرى مشاركون أن للبيباص قدرة "نادرة" في ظل إعاقة حركية كاملة، حيث تتقن الفن التشكيلي عبر الرسم بالفم، بعد أن تعذر استمرارها الرسم بالقدمين.

وتشتغل البيباص بالألوان المائية وقلم الرصاص، وقالت في تصريح للجزيرة نت إن طموحاتها كبيرة، وإن الإعاقة لا تقف أمام إصرارها خصوصا في ظل وجود دعم العائلة.

المصدر: الجزيرة.
الرابط: http://www.aljazeera.net/NR/EXERES/98B84FCE-EF29-4DA9-90FC-13200976D161.htm.

Lebanon 'gave Israel army tips'

Defense minister offered advice to Israel in 2008 on how to defeat Hezbollah, WikiLeaks documents show.

04 Dec 2010

Lebanon's defense minister offered advice to Israel in 2008 on how they might defeat Hezbollah, the Shia group based in southern Lebanon, according to US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks.

The memo, published in Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar, showed Elias Murr telling US officials that areas under Hezbollah control would not receive Lebanese forces' protection from attacks.

"If Israel has to bomb all of these places in the Shia areas as a matter of operational concern, that is Hezbollah's problem,'' Murr reportedly said.

'Not accurate'

The minister also said that any Israeli attack on Lebanon should avoid bombing Christian areas, to stop public opinion turning against them.

"Murr told us that Israel would do well to avoid two things when it comes for Hezbollah," the US officials are quoted as saying.

"One, it must not touch the Blue Line or the UNSCR 1701 areas as this will keep Hezbollah out of these areas," said the memo, referring to the border region in southern Lebanon patrolled by UN peacekeepers.

"Two, Israel cannot bomb bridges and infrastructure in the Christian areas," Murr is cited as stating.

However, Murr said that he was not responsible for passing on messages to Israel.

In the March 10 meeting, Murr added that the Lebanese army would avoid taking part in any future war, but the military would be ready to "take over, once Hezbollah's militia has been destroyed".

George Soulage, Murr's principal aide, said Murr had met with Michele Sison, then US ambassador, but refuted the accusation of the leak, stating: "The information posted by WikiLeaks is not complete and is not accurate.

"The aim behind this is to sow discord in Lebanon.

"The cable does not reflect the truth about what happened during the meeting and it has no value."

War fear

The memo states that in the meeting Murr expressed fears that another war between Hezbollah and Israel was imminent, following their battle in 2006.

Elias Hanna, a retired Lebanese general, told Al Jazeera that the cable had to be taken in context: "The meeting was like two hours and a half. And it depends who wrote this paper, what is his style and what does he want to do.

"In our field, there is a lot of difference between analysis and real intelligence. This cable is about real intelligence you don’t have to go and analyze it. It will cause political uproar in Lebanon … it will create political problems.

"The damage is done for his political career. "

Another memo reveals that the US secretly flew reconnaissance flights over Hezbollah locations in 2008, using British airbases.

UK officials reportedly complained about the use of their national airbases to launch the missions.

The revelations will cause tensions to rise between Hezbollah and Lebanon's Western-backed government.

It comes when the potentially explosive outcome of a UN tribunal to uncover the perpetrators of the 2005 assassination of Rafiq al-Hariri, the ex-prime minister of Lebanon, could be announced this month.

Members of Hezbollah - that claims the trial is biased - could be indicted by the court. Many people fear that such an outcome could ignite violence.

The WikiLeaks website began releasing more than 250,000 classified US diplomatic cables on Sunday, infuriating Washington, which called the leaks an "attack on the international community".

Source: al-Jazeera.
Link: http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2010/12/20101246144971381.html.

Qaeda in Iraq denies its militants arrested: SITE

DUBAI, Dec 03, 2010 (AFP) - Al-Qaeda's front group in Iraq denied on Friday that 12 of its militants had been arrested in Baghdad in connection with last month's deadly cathedral siege, the SITE Intelligence Group reported.

A statement posted by the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) on jihadist websites said Iraqi claims of the arrests were fabricated by the Baghdad government, the US-based group said.

ISI accused the Iraqi authorities of "patching news due to the failure of their futile security agencies."

"Here we declare that this news is completely far from the truth," the statement said.

"If it is true that 10 'terrorists' or less 'according to their claims' were able to shake the earth from beneath their feet in Baghdad, how about tens like them or hundreds? How about if they are thousands?"

On November 27 an Iraqi interior ministry official announced the arrest of 12 militants, including ISI's chief in Baghdad Huthaifa al-Batawi, suspected of helping to take Christians hostage in a church siege.

"Police have arrested 12 members of the group responsible for the attack against the church," the official said, without saying when they were detained.

He also said that senior ISI leader Ammar al-Najadi had been killed in raids in Baghdad's east and west.

The arrests were the first reported by Iraqi authorities since the October 31 attack on a Baghdad cathedral and ensuing shoot-out when troops stormed it. In all 44 worshipers, two priests and seven security force personnel were killed.

On Thursday Iraqi Interior Minister Jawad Bolani said that 39 other suspected ISI members had been arrested in the mostly Sunni western province of Anbar.

Major General Dhia Hussein said that among those detained were Hazim al-Azzawi, an ISI "minister," Ahmed Hussein Ali, ISI's "Mufti of Anbar" and Abdul Razzaq, the organization's media chief.

© Copyright AFP 2010.

Source: Zawya.
Link: http://www.zawya.com/story.cfm/sidANA20101203T175346ZHGW78.

Facebook bans Al Qassam English homepage

04-12-2010

Al Qassam website-Gaza –Social network service "Facebook" has disabled the official homepage of Al Qassam Brigades -Hamas military wing on Facebook website.

At the time that Zionist websites spread its hateful propaganda against the Palestinian people openly on its social network service, Facebook administration bans a lot of Palestinian and pro-Palestinian websites from spreading news or information related to exposing the violations by Zionist occupation against the Palestinians in Gaza and West Bank.

Al Qassam Facebook home page disappeared three days after it was posted on the official website (http://www.qassam.ps/index.html), however, the website did not harm the rules of the social networking while spreading his news, articles, statements and videos.

By its reckless and deliberate step, Facebook administration proves that it is a real cheap tool biased for the Zionist occupation in Palestine.

For our important role, we are the Al Qassam Brigades condemn strongly the reckless decision made by the Facebook administration on banning our official English website from establishing on the social network service Facebook and do call on all free people who believes in justice and freedom of expression, especially journalists from everywhere to express their displeasure with Facebook foolhardy move regarding the continued ban on the official English homepage of the Al Qassam Brigades Website on the social network service "Facebook"!.

Source: Ezzedeen al-Qassam Brigades - Information Office.
Link: http://www.qassam.ps/news-3872-Facebook_bans_Al_Qassam_English_homepage.html.

What NATO looks like in the age of European austerity

Amid budget cutbacks and a 'diminishing appetite' for war, Europe has turned increasingly to the 'soft power' assignments like training and institution-building.

By Howard LaFranchi, Staff writer / December 3, 2010
Lisbon

When Portugal's Prime Minister José Sócrates welcomed President Obama on Nov. 19 to the NATO summit in Lisbon by announcing 150 additional Portuguese soldiers for Atlantic Alliance's deployment in Afghanistan, it was a surprise to the Portuguese people, who are coping with a growing economic crisis.

It was also a small exception to a larger trend across Europe of severe cutbacks, including military deployments and defense budgets, even as the European Union solidifies its place as one of the world's top providers of international humanitarian and development aid.

What that trend portends, say a growing number of experts on US-European relations, is a scenario under which the United States is more and more the provider of hard power – or military force – for the North Atlantic Alliance, while Europe turns increasingly to the soft power assignments like training and institution-building that it appears to prefer.

Some European military officials insist the trend is overplayed, adding that it will be Europe that will show the way to a more effective and efficient Atlantic military alliance by stepping up duplication-reducing cooperative ventures and hardware procurement.

'Paper tiger'?

But one statistic nevertheless stands out as a kind of caution light for NATO: Whereas a decade ago the US accounted for just under half of NATO members' defense spending, today the US share is closer to 75 percent – and growing.

Of NATO's European members, only France, Britain, and Greece reach the alliance's goal of spending 2 percent of gross domestic product on defense. And with Britain – along with France, one of Europe's last real military powers – set to reduce defense spending by 8 percent by 2015, the US-Europe divide is only expected to widen.

The trend risks leaving Europe a "paper tiger" that is not taken seriously on the world stage, NATO's secretary-general, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, said during the Lisbon summit. Another danger, he warns, is that the US will turn away from Europe and look elsewhere for reliable defense partners.

"We cannot end up in a situation where Europe cannot pull its weight when it comes to security," Mr. Rasmussen said in October. "The United States would look elsewhere for its security partner."

For some US-Europe analysts, however, the day has already arrived.

"It's amazing to think that the argument used to be over when the EU would supplant NATO" as Europe's preeminent common security and defense institution, says John Hulsman, an international relations expert and consultant in Berlin. "Now the de facto division is one where the US is the military power and we look to Europe to help with the soft power, and there is no more argument about it."

Europeans 'tired' of war

A "diminishing appetite" in Europe for the kinds of jobs implicit in a mission like NATO's in Afghanistan is one explanation for the growing US-Europe "division of labor" in international interventions, says Charles Kupchan, a transatlantic expert at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) in Washington. But another, he adds, is that Europe found itself at the end of the cold war with forces that were "primarily structured for a land conflict in Europe, with little capacity to project power beyond NATO's borders."

Recognizing that, some NATO officials and experts alike say it will be a restructuring of those European forces and better coordination among them that will keep Europe from retreating completely as a defense and security partner.

"If one were to say that Europe is going only in the direction of soft power, I would not agree," says Gen. Stéphane Abrial, NATO's supreme allied commander for transformation. Pointing to a recent French-British defense accord on pooling certain resources and coordinating more military activities, he says, "That's not about soft power, it's an agreement to make the best use of resources to be able to use hard power more effectively ... for the benefit of the EU and the benefit of NATO."

General Abrial, who prior to his NATO assignment was France's Air Force chief of staff, says Europe's take on the exercise of hard power is rooted in its millenniums of warfare.

"If you look at Europe in history, for centuries Europe was very good at hard power, maybe too good. That period is over, fortunately," he adds, but it means that "most Europeans are tired" of war.

EU's new role in NATO

Europe has developed a "strong institution for the exercise of soft power," Abrial says, "and that is the European Union." And that is no small thing, he adds, at a time when the "concepts" of power are expanding.

NATO's job, as a defense alliance, will be to face the challenges of declining defense budgets "head on" with a comprehensive effort to "eliminate unwanted duplications" and "coordinate for more efficiencies."

That European effort to make the best of declining defense budgets by more "aggregating and coordinating among European countries" makes sense for the short term, says CFR's Mr. Kupchan. But more long term, he adds, Europe will have to do more than simply manage its decline as a military power if it wants to remain a player on the world stage.

Mr. Hulsman says the days of American "hand-wringing" about Europe's retreat as a military power are "pretty much over," replaced by an acceptance and even appreciation of what it is Europe can do.

"Yes there's disappointment, but I think the thinking now is that some help is better than no help," he says. "They can help on counter-terrorism, that's something they're good at, they can help and even lead on training and institution-building, and we always need their dollars for Palestine," he says, referring to EU assistance to the Palestinian Authority. "But the reality is the US will be looking more to the Indian Ocean and other regions" as it addresses global security challenges.

US looks East for new partners

Mr. Obama's November trip through Asia, which included stops in India, South Korea, and Indonesia, was certainly seen as bolstering defense ties in that region, possibly as a bulwark against an increasingly strong China. What's more, as part of a recent tour through the Asia-Pacific region, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton sought to bolster defense ties with Australia.

While the US is increasingly looking to the East to build new military partnerships, it's up to Europe to decide if it wants to accept the new "division of labor," says Kupchan, or if it intends to remain the kind of consequential player on the world stage that requires maintaining an ability to project military power.

"Right now Europe remains America's go-to partner, in part because there are no other options," says Kupchan. "But with the US fighting two wars and running deep deficits, it is increasingly asking, 'What do our allies bring to the table?'"

The "smart power" that is Europe's strength is a definite plus, he adds, "but the Europeans have to realize that the more they bring to the table, the stronger the transatlantic bond will be."

Source: The Christian Science Monitor.
Link: http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-Issues/2010/1203/What-NATO-looks-like-in-the-age-of-European-austerity.

Could WikiLeaks survive without Julian Assange?

LONDON (AP) — Its founder is a wanted man, its systems are under attack, it is condemned from the capitals of the world.

But although the future is uncertain for WikiLeaks, the website dedicated to releasing classified information has opened a Pandora's Box of secret-spilling that will be difficult to reverse.

WikiLeaks, which has triggered global governmental alarm by releasing reams of classified U.S. diplomatic cables, is facing attacks in cyberspace and in the legal sphere. The site is assailed by hackers and has been booted from its U.S. server. Frontman Julian Assange is in hiding and faces allegations of sexual misconduct.

"Whatever happens to the domain name and the actual organization, the idea unleashed by WikLeaks is going to continue," said Joshua Benton, director of the Nieman Journalism Lab.

Ben Laurie, a data security expert who advised WikiLeaks before it launched in 2006, agreed.

"The concept is not going to die. It's really hard to keep things shut down if they want to stay up," he said. "Look at everything else people would like not to happen online — phishing, spam, porn. It's all still there."

Little is known about the day-to-day functioning of WikiLeaks. It has no headquarters, few if any paid staff — but a famous public face in Assange, a wiry 39-year-old Australian computer hacker with no permanent address.

He's on the cover of newspapers and magazines around the world, but he has not appeared in public for a month.

Assange, who is somewhere in Britain, is the subject of a European arrest warrant issued by authorities in Sweden, where he is accused of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion.

If British police arrest him, he will likely be caught up in a lengthy legal fight against extradition and could be jailed, his ability to operate as the face of WikiLeaks curtailed even further.

Assange denies the Swedish charges, which his British lawyer, Mark Stephens, has said stem from a "dispute over consensual but unprotected sex." He said Assange was happy to speak to Swedish prosecutors and had provided his contact details to authorities there and in Britain.

Assange also has made powerful enemies in the United States, especially since WikiLeaks released thousands of secret logs from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan earlier this year. With the latest leaks, U.S. politicians have called for him to be prosecuted for espionage — or worse. Former Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin asked on Facebook: "Why was he not pursued with the same urgency we pursue al-Qaida and Taliban leaders?"

Assange acknowledged Friday that "I have become the lightning rod."

"In the end, someone must be responsible to the public and only a leadership that is willing to be publicly courageous can genuinely suggest that sources take risks for the greater good," he said during a question-and-answer session on The Guardian newspaper's website.

"I get undue attacks on every aspect of my life, but then I also get undue credit as some kind of balancing force."

It's not just governments and the law with whom Assange conflicts. He is a divisive figure who has been accused of overshadowing WikiLeaks' work and appears to have fallen out with several former colleagues.

They include WikiLeaks' former German spokesman Daniel Schmitt, who has written a soon-to-be-published book about his time at the website.

In September, German magazine Der Spiegel quoted Schmitt as saying that Assange "reacted to any criticism with the allegation that I was disobedient to him and disloyal to the project."

Yet those who have worked with Assange say his charisma and passion are evident.

"You kind of get the feeling that you are talking to a persona from the 'Matrix' movies," said Icelandic legislator Robert Marshall, who met Assange while preparing legislation that aims to turn the island nation into a haven of media freedom. "But his enthusiasm toward freedom of expression and the rights of journalists was very real to me."

Laurie recalled Assange as "fairly geeky, very smart, extremely interesting to talk to."

"I know a lot of geeks and I certainly know weirder people than him," Laurie said.

As WikiLeaks released the first few hundred of what it says are a quarter of a million secret diplomatic cables this week, pressure on the site grew.

Amazon.com Inc., which had provided WikiLeaks with use of its servers, evicted it on Wednesday saying the website had violated its terms of service. The site remains on the servers of its Swedish provider, Bahnhof AB.

The next day, WikiLeaks' American domain name system provider withdrew service to the wikileaks.org name after it came under concerted cyber-attack. Service provider everyDNS said the attacks threatened the rest of its network. WikiLeaks responded by moving to a Swiss domain name, wikileaks.ch. On Friday, the French government moved to ban WikiLeaks from servers in that country.

Chased from one country to the next, WikiLeaks also appears perennially cash-strapped, appealing on its website and Twitter for donations to "keep us strong."

Recently it seems to have taken steps to put itself on a firmer footing. Last month it set up a private limited company in Iceland as part of a move to restructure its global operations. The organization is also establishing legal entities in Sweden and France, spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson said, as bases from which to carry out tasks such as opening bank accounts.

The Icelandic government recently passed a resolution in favor of a bill that aims to turn the tiny nation into a journalistic haven by granting high-level protection to investigative journalists and their sources. Backers hope the initiative, partly driven by Assange, will become law next year. Such a law could provide protection to a site like WikiLeaks.

Assange said in Friday's online chat that WikiLeaks had taken steps to make sure it was not silenced, sending the "Cablegate" material and other secret documents in encrypted form "to over 100,000 people."

"If something happens to us, the key parts will be released automatically," he said. "History will win."

Whatever happens to Wikileaks, the anti-secrecy cat may be out of the bag. Schmitt, the former WikiLeaks spokesman, has said he wants to set up a rival secret-spilling site, and others may follow.

"I think the basic concept has a future," said Steven Aftergood, who works on government secrecy policy for the Federation of American Scientists. "Anonymous disclosure of restricted records is easier than it has ever been. The virtues of transparency and government accountability are more widely recognized than they have ever been. Those two factors together provide a foundation for this kind of activity.

"Whether it will be Julian Assange's WikiLeaks or the new German spinoff or another initiative remains to be seen," he said.

Benton, director of the Nieman Lab, said that means governments will have to develop a response beyond condemnation and legal threats. He compared it to music file-sharing, which was greeted with hostility by a music industry that soon realized it had to develop ways to make money from downloads.

"They can't think, 'This is an opponent we need to defeat,'" he said. "They have to think about how they are going to deal with it."

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

WikiLeaks Reveals Diplomatic Cables on Aafia Siddiqui

by Stephen Lendman
Friday Dec 3rd, 2010

On September 23 in federal court, she was sentenced to 86 years in prison, though committed no crime. It's a gross miscarriage of justice, compounding what's she's already endured, following her March 30, 2003 abduction, imprisonment, torture, prosecution, and conviction on spurious charges.

Through sentencing she was in New York City solitary confinement and may still be there, pending transfer to Federal Medical Center (FMC) Carswell in Fort Worth, TX, a hellhole described as a facility "provid(ing) specialized medical and mental health services to female prisoners." If she's there long-term, it'll be a death sentence, its harshness precipitating it sooner, not later.

On November 4, Yvonne Ridley called it "CarsHELL," citing its past 10 year record, including:

-- over 100 young women dying under "questionable circumstances with families unable to obtain autopsy reports;"

-- instances of sex abuse, including sodomy and rape committed by "prison chaplain Vincent Bassie" until he was charged and convicted in 2008;

-- a prison doctor convicted of sex abuse; another one never charged for the same crime;

-- a prison guard convicted of raping a detainee; an earlier article explained rampant sexual abuse and mistreatment of female prisoners by guards and prison officials, accessed through the following link:

http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/11/torture-in-us-prisons.html

-- gross medical negligence, what's commonplace throughout America's gulag for men, women and children;

-- "forced psychotropic medication on reluctant detainees;" and

-- an "infestation of ants went unchecked even when one patient in a coma was covered by biting creatures as was the corpse of another."

Ridley quoted The Fort Worth Weekly saying Carswell imprisonment "can be a death sentence for women prisoners." Incarceration there will continue her torture, abuse and violation of international and US law, as well as Bureau of Prisons regulations that aren't enforced so, in fact, are worthless.

US Diplomatic Cables Revealed

In several December 1 reports, the London Guardian discussed them, including its article headlined, "US embassy cables: Bagram officials deny detaining Aafia Siddiqui."

US deception and lies about her date from initial accusations, regarding a bogus plot to bomb New York landmarks, charges omitted from her indictment.

Though abducted while visiting family in Pakistan on March 30, 2003, the FBI, on April 4, denied she was captured and detained. On May 28, 2004, Pakistan's Interior Ministry confirmed she was turned over to US authorities in 2003 after no links with alleged terror groups were confirmed.

Later reports named her Bagram's "Prisoner 650." At the same time, US authorities denied holding any women there. It wasn't until July 31, 2008 that FBI officials told Siddiqui's brother that she was in US custody. Her family knew it years earlier.

The released cables contained no bombshell information. One dated July 31, 2008 said:

"Bagram officials have assured us that they have not been holding Siddiqui for the last four years, as has been alleged."

An October 29, 2008 cable denied knowledge of Siddiqui's children, even though her son was in US custody and two others at the time were missing. Pakistan's Acting Foreign Secretary, Khalid Babar, raised the issue with then ambassador Anne Patterson, who "made it clear that US authorities do not know the whereabouts of the children, who have never been in US custody, and noted that the Pakistani Embassy has been given full consular access to Siddiqui," a claim very much stretching the truth.

A November 13, 2008 cable said Pakistan's Prime Minister Yousuf "Gilani asked the US to release to GOP custody Dr. Aafia Siddiqui....argu(ing) that the needs of her family and reports of her being ill provided humanitarian grounds for such a transfer. He also argued that her case whipped up mass popular support, diverting his government's attention from the counterterrorism mission."

A February 12, 2010 cable said "a group of moderate Muslim religious leaders expressed very strong feelings about the Siddiqui case and the guilty verdict. The religious leaders were unified in their belief that Siddiqui did not receive a fair trial and called for mercy on the grounds that she was a women. They claimed that the verdict detracted from President Obama's efforts to reach out to the Muslim community and that he should step in and release Siddiqui as a show of good faith towards world Muslims."

The US Embassy said "Siddiqui had received a fair trial," when, in fact, it was rigged to convict.

A February 19, 2010 cable discussed a February 16 Gilani/Senator John Kerry meeting at which he:

"asked USG to consider repatriating Dr. Aafia Siddiqui on humanitarian grounds. He said that this was a very contentious issue in Pakistan, adding that by returning Dr. Siddiqui 'the US would be in the Pakistani people's good graces.' Both Gilani and Interior Minister Reham Malik assured Kerry that the GOP would honor the terms of Dr. Siddiqui's jail sentence, and suggested that she complete (it) under house arrest (in Pakistan). Kerry agreed to look into the prisoner transfer issue."

Likely not too hard as over nine months later, action didn't follow. Siddiqui is either in New York City isolation or at FMC "CarsHELL," perhaps there to die. If so, at least she'll have the peace she's been denied for over seven and a half years of brutal imprisonment, isolation and torture.

On December 1, Guardian writer Declan Walsh headlined, "WikiLeaks cables: Mystery deepens over Pakistan scientist Aafia Siddiqui," saying:

Her family insists she's innocent, "and that she spent the 'missing' five years between 2003 and 2008 in US detention at the Bagram base," US denials notwithstanding.

They've "been treated with skepticism by the Pakistani media, which has given credence to the family's account and dismissed US statements as part of a cover-up."

America's major media reacted otherwise, pronouncing guilt by accusation, biasing public opinion, branding her and other FBI targets "terrorists," as well all or most Muslims by implication.

In several articles, New York Times writers played along, including Benjamin Weiser in his September 23 account, headlined, "Pakistani Sentenced to 86 Years for Attack," saying:

She was convicted for "assault(ing) a team of American officers and agents who went to question her after her arrest that led to her conviction....on charges that included attempting to kill American officers and employees. She had been taken into custody in Ghazni, Afghanistan, after the local authorities became suspicious of her loitering outside the provincial governor's compound."

In fact, Weiser lied from top of paragraph to bottom.

Targeted for her faith, ethnicity, activism, passion for the oppressed, humble charity, and alleged connection to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed through marriage, she was home in Karachi visiting family. On March 30, 2003, en route to a flight to Rawalpindi, she was abducted by Pakistan's police or ISI at the behest of US officials, then turned over to them as requested.

Preposterous charges later accused her of the following:

In the presence of two FBI agents, two Army interpreters, and three US Army officers, this frail 110 pound woman allegedly assaulted three of them, seized one of their rifles, opened fire at point blank range, hit no one, yet she alone was severely wounded.

At trial, no credible evidence was presented. The accusations were concocted and spurious. None accused her of plotting to blow up New York or any other landmarks or facilities. Yet proceedings were carefully orchestrated. Witnesses were enlisted, pressured, coerced, and/or bribed to cooperate. Jurors were then intimidated to convict "based on fear, not fact," according to her attorney Elaine Whitfield Sharp.

Yet Weiser accepted the official account unskeptically, highlighting FBI director Robert Mueller calling her "an Al Qaeda operative and facilitator," carrying bomb-making instructions and a list of targets when arrested in 2008.

It was March 2003, five years earlier, unmentioned in Weiser's article, mostly presenting official distortions and lies, a New York Times speciality. This time he disparaged an innocent woman, condemned perhaps to perish in prison hell for being Muslim at the wrong time in America.

Source: Indybay.
Link: http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/12/03/18665528.php.

Water Pollution Causes Villagers to Shun Local Produce

Dec 2, 2010

Pollution by paper mills and fabric dye companies in Hebei Province has resulted in an unusual situation for farmers in several places there: worried about potential contaminants, they dare not eat their own produce, so they ship it out to other regions and ship in new produce for their own consumption.

This is the case for residents in Yeqiao Village, located about 500 meters (1,640.4 feet) to the west of the Hengli Dyeing plant.

Rongcheng County, Hebei Province, is known for its manufacturing of dress shirts. The fabric dye business is also flourishing there as a result, and has brought severe water pollution to the region.

Shaheying Village has about 4,000 inhabitants who make their living farming. Within the village area is also the Hengli Dyeing and Finishing Limited Corporation and the Rongxing Paper Mill, and they have been fouling up the ground water.

The Yanzhao Metropolitan News prepared a detailed report on the subject on Nov. 24. In the article a resident says that the water from his well is all black. Because of the pollution, the villagers dug a 400-mete- deep well last year; unlike the Yeiqao villagers, they think crops should be safe to consume.

Toxic Waste Water Dumping

Waste water from the Hengli Dyeing plant is discharged through underground pipes into an open 3-4 meter wide canal about 600 meters away from the factory.

A villager, whose farm runs along the canal, told the Yanzhao Metropolitan News that the grain next to the canal is not as large as grain growing further away. He said during the rainy season the wastewater from the canal spills over into the crops, and all the crops within the flooded area die. “The water probably contains stuff like acid and caustic soda,” he said.

Further to the south, there is another, deeper, canal next to a small workshop and two large trash piles nearby. A stream of dirty water is flowing out from an opening under the building, which used to be another paper mill, but now serves as an illegal recycling and reprocessing plant for the leftover plastic from the paper mill, according to the Rongcheng Environmental Control Bureau.

On Oct. 29, New Tang Dynasty television reported that 6 million tons of toxic chromium waste is piled around 20 cities across China, polluting the environment for two decades according to state media.

In Gongyi City, Henan Province, 50,000 tons of the cancer-causing chromium waste has been left standing less than 2 miles from a river.

While Chinese citizens are exposed to high levels of toxic chemicals in their water and food, China's high-ranking officials reserve for themselves organic foods grown in special supply bases. This commonly known information was brought to light again in September 2008, soon after the melamine-tainted milk scandal broke, where infants were poisoned from tainted milk powder, and the authorities initially attempted to kill the story.

Source: The Epoch Times.
Link: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/46860/.

Rio Will Have Brazilian Army Peace Force

Security officials call it a long-term operation

By Bruno Menezes
Epoch Times Staff

Dec 3, 2010

RIO, BRAZIL—Rio de Janeiro will get a peacekeeping task force similar to the Brazilian mission in Haiti. The announcement was made early on Thursday by the Brazilian Army commander, Gen. Enzo Peri, during an official visit to the operations area, said Agência Brasil, a Brazilian government news agency.

Gen. Peri said plans are already underway for the peacekeeping task force, which is unprecedented in Brazil, and are expected to be deployed by the end of the month. In the past, police controlled the operations, while the army participated in siege and isolation activities with around 800 men.

Accompanying Gen. Peri was Gen. Adriano Pereira Junior, commander of the Eastern Military, who said the peacekeeping force comprises 8,000 men to guarantee law and order—or urban policing—and strengthen operations in other Rio slums.

The army troops are preparing to occupy the interior of the "favelas" or slums of the German Complex (Complexo do Alemão) and Cruzeiro Village (Vila Cruzeiro), replacing police who in turn will focus more on weapon and drug seizures.

According to Rio's Secretariat of Security, the operations in northern Rio's German Complex were planned two years ago. The delay was due to lack of manpower and logistics, now solved by the participation of the armed forces.

German Complex Still Under Fire

For the last six days, the complexes have been under gunfire and weapon and drug seizures since the occupation of the German Complex by security forces on Sunday, Nov. 28.

Involving some 2,600 law enforcement personnel, the occupations began after a series of attacks were initiated on Nov. 21, when panic spread throughout the city and more than 100 vehicles were burned out. According to security officials, the attacks were a reaction from drug traffickers against the installation of the Pacification Police Units (PPUs) in the slums and surrounding areas.

The military police are now seeking a group of outlaws who took refuge in the Tijuca Forest, Abril News reported. On Thursday, the police arrested four leaders in other parts of Rio, according to the newspaper, O Estado. Many drug traffickers have fled the German Complex to smaller slums and are now spread across the Baixada Fluminense, located in northern Rio.

So far, 20 traffickers suspected of ordering the attacks have been transferred to the Maximum Security Prison of Catanduvas in the state of Pará, which houses the country's most dangerous criminals, the news agency, O Dia reported. The Brazilian Lawyer's Order (OAB) has temporarily suspended and is suing lawyers of some of the main leaders in detention on the suspicion they passed commands onto the gangs.

Long-Term Peacekeeping Project

Sergio Cabral, the Governor of Rio, said on Monday that the military should remain in the region until the PPUs are established, which is scheduled for the first half of 2011 with potentially more than 2,000 police.

"We will not sleep on the laurels of past victories," Cabral said at a forum on urban infrastructure for the 2016 Olympics. "We wake up early with new challenges which are to effectively regain territories still occupied by a parallel force. These steps require coordination with the Ministry of Defense and the Federal Police."

José Mariano Beltrame, the Rio state security secretary, said the occupations will be long-term, according to the Security Secretariat's website.

At the inauguration of the 13th PPU held in an area where a police helicopter was shot down by drug traffickers last year, Beltrame said, "God willing, next year, many other communities will be able to live as these thirteen are living today. I'm sure that in another few years, we will deliver another Rio de Janeiro to society."

Beltrame said the police are already preparing new units for communities in the south of the city at Vidigal and Rocinha, the largest slum in Latin America.

According to police, so far the operations have resulted in 223 arrests, 50 deaths, 109 burned out vehicles, and the seizure of 410 motorcycles and 200 stolen vehicles (many luxury), plus 40 tons of marijuana and cocaine, and a highly destructive arsenal of more than 200 weapons, including pistols, rifles, machine guns, shotguns, grenades, anti-tank bazookas, and anti-aircraft guns.

Some weapons seized are similar to those used by guerrillas and terrorists in other countries, and some have been diverted from the Brazilian army. The drugs are being incinerated.

Jéssica Almeida, Rio security sub-secretary, said that by police estimates the seizures have already caused a loss of US$59 million to the drug traffickers—a figure which impressed even the more experienced officers, reported Globo TV.

Gustavo Trompowski, professor at the College of War, spoke about the German Complex's occupation.

"It gives a clear impression that that was the general headquarters, the center of their operation and their large commercial warehouse," Trompowski said. "Within a few hours, the amount seized was four or five times that of the past year."

The expert believes the weapons are being smuggled to the bandits via sea routes, Paraguay, and Colombian FARC guerrillas, who have connections with Brazilian drug traffic.

International Security Measures Required

Last Thursday, the Federal Police began Operation Five Stars to thwart a scheme of international drug trafficking that has been under investigation since last year, according to the newspaper, O Estado. The drugs came from Bolivia and were distributed to six states. Six gang members have been arrested.

The federal government has also reinforced policing of the borders with Paraguay and Bolivia, where more than 80 percent of drugs and weapons enter Brazil and fuel organized crime. This measure, part of Operation Sentinel—which involves many levels of national security in conjunction with Paraguay—will support the operations in Rio and also help prevent the entry of logistical support and the flight of criminals.

On Monday, Justice Minister Luiz Paulo Barreto met with Sacha Llorenty, the government minister of Bolivia, in Brazil to negotiate joint actions against the drug traffic.

Barreto said these are medium to long-term actions that should also include Peru and other South American countries. "South America should jointly seek solutions to this problem," he told Agência Brasil. "And the best way to do this is through cooperation, information exchange, and joint operations."

According to a study by the Brazilian Institute of Public Opinion and Statistics (Ibope) released on Thursday, 88 percent of Rio residents approve of the war against drug trafficking.

The survey polled 1,000 people from Nov. 27 to 29. The community service hotline received 853 calls from residents in a single day, breaking records since its inception. Police said operations in the slums of the German Complex and Penha have already reduced crime rates by 70 percent in surrounding regions.

A civilian police survey shows that more than 20 percent of the population—1.2 million people in 150 communities—live in favelas dominated by drug traffic, and that 100 other communities are dominated by militias composed of corrupt former police and military officers.

Source: The Epoch Times.
Link: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/46935/.

Death toll in Israel bushfire rises to 43

Sat, 04 Dec 2010

Tel Aviv - The death toll from the massive bushfire in northern Israel rose to 43 Saturday morning, after the charred remains of a 16-year-old youth were identified.

Israel Radio named the latest fatality as Elad Rebin, a volunteer fireman who perished when trying to rescue prison service cadets whose bus had been trapped in the inferno. Some 36 cadets on the bus were burned to death. The other dead were police officers, firemen, and a civilian.

On Saturday morning, some 44 hours after the fire first began on the drought-stricken, heavily-forested Carmel hill, south-east of the city of Haifa, it was still defying efforts to bring it under control.

During the night the flames spread to the villages of Nir Ezion and Ein Hod, burning houses, and forcing police and firefighters to rescue residents who had not already fled.

However, firefighters managed to prevent the flames from reaching the Haifa suburb of Deniya, which lies on the south-eastern outskirts of the city, even though at one stage it was only one kilometer from the quarter's outlying streets.

The inferno also reached a hotel, and a wildlife reserve.

Early-morning reports said the blaze was concentrated between the village of Beit Oren and a major road linking Haifa with Tel Aviv to the south, and between the village of Usafiya and the village of Nir Etzion.

With first light, firefighting aircraft were taking to the skies in an effort to try and bring the fire under control. Hopes were being pinned on two huge aircraft sent from Russia, which can hold tens of thousands of liters of water.

Aircraft from Greece, Cyprus and Bulgaria were also involved in the firefighting efforts, and more planes from Spain and France were expected to arrive. Other countries sending aid included Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, Croatia, Romania, Italy, Azerbaijan, Britain and the US. The Palestinian Authority said it had sent fire trucks.

Officials said Friday night that since it broke out, the fire had destroyed more than 3,400 hectares of land, devoured over 4 million trees, and forced 17,000 people to flee their homes.

But another fire, which began near the town of Ma'alot, about 40 kilometers north-east of the Carmel fire, was brought under control. City officials said they suspected arson.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/356515,israel-bushfire-rises-43.html.

France wants cooperation with India on civil nuclear energy

Sat, 04 Dec 2010

New Delhi - France was ready for limitless cooperation with India on civil nuclear energy, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Saturday, adding that it was time to end India's nuclear isolation.

Speaking before a gathering of scientists and officials in India's information technology hub Bangalore, Sarkozy said it was inconsistent to expect a developing country like India to adopt non-polluting technologies and yet restrict its access to nuclear energy.

Sarkozy is on a four-day visit to India and an agreement between French company Areva T&D SA and the Nuclear Power Corporation of India is expected to be signed during his visit.

Areva is slated to provide up to six reactors for a state-run nuclear power plant in the western state of Maharashtra.

Speaking to scientists at the Indian Space Research Organization's satellite center in Bangalore, Sarkozy said France was proud and eager to collaborate on new research with India in the space sector.

"Space adventures cannot be the monopoly of one or two states alone," Sarkozy said.

Sarkozy, accompanied by his celebrity wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, is scheduled to fly to the northern Indian town of Agra later Saturday on a private visit to see the Taj Mahal.

Sarkozy is expected to hold talks with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in Delhi Monday.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/356529,india-civil-nuclear-energy.html.

Tamil voters in Britain behind London's Sri Lanka stance: WikiLeaks

Sat, 04 Dec 2010

Berlin - The British government's concern for ex-pat Tamil voters in marginal constituencies at home drove London's criticisms of the Sri Lankan government's actions in last year's ending of the country's civil war, WikiLeaks diplomatic cables suggest.

David Miliband, then British foreign secretary in a Labor government, was outspoken in criticism of the actions of the Colombo government as it closed in on Tamil fighters in the north of the island, where many thousand civilians were also sheltering.

The cable noted "the have ry vocal' Tamil diaspora in the UK, numbering over 300,000" people.

"With UK elections on the horizon and many Tamils living in Labor constituencies with slim majorities, the government is paying particular attention to Sri Lanka," read a cable from the United States embassy in London from the spring of 2009.

As the Sri Lankan military made its final push in the early part of 2009 against the militant Tamil Tigers, human rights groups warned of extreme abuses taking place, and United Nations officials estimated that thousands of civilians might have been killed in the final weeks of fighting.

Another cable, from the US Embassy in Colombo, highlighted that US diplomats had concerns over human rights abuses and the failure of the government to adequately address the charges.

The "responsibility for many of the alleged crimes rests with the country's senior civilian and military leadership, including President Rajapaksa and his brothers and opposition candidate General Fonseka," a message said.

The British foreign office led a concerted diplomatic effort against the government in Colombo, in an effort to allow humanitarian aid to reach Tamil civilians and stem the violence.

However, when Western governments finally did call Colombo before the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, developing countries backed Sri Lanka in its dispute with its former colonial master.

The final resolution from the council ended up praising Sri Lanka's government - despite an outcry from human rights groups concerned for the mostly Tamil civilians in displaced persons camps.

But the cables also noted an "obvious split" between Tamils in Sri Lanka and the diaspora, with the ones in country less intent on pressing the issue of accountability for war crimes, while those abroad "would like to see the issue as an immediate top-priority issue."

The Tamils in the country, under pressure from the increasingly authoritarian government, felt themselves "vulnerable to political or even physical attack if they raise the issue of accountability publicly."

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/356539,sri-lanka-stance-wikileaks.html.

Negligence cause of Israel wildfire, say police

Sat, 04 Dec 2010

Tel Aviv/Haifa - Negligence was probably behind the wildfire that has destroyed 3,400 hectares of land in northern Israel and killed at least 41 people, a preliminary investigation of the Israeli police concluded Saturday.

"Negligence seems to be the cause of the main fire", Israeli police spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld told the German Press Agency, dpa.

However, the investigation was set to continue as efforts to put out the blaze could take another 48 hours, depending on changes in the wind and temperatures.

Israeli fire services were hopeful that with the "impressive" international help that Israel has received the wildfire could be controlled by Saturday night.

"The fire is not yet under control, it might be later on in the evening. In any case we hope it will be before the night because then the works become very problematic", Yoram Levy, spokesman of the Fire services said to dpa.

Levy said that despite the efforts to "extinguish the main fire to the minimum" Saturday, the works might last until Sunday.

Israel received more firefighting aircraft from abroad Saturday morning and have been working together with at least 10 Israeli aircraft since 6 AM (0400GMT).

A Russian plane capable of dumping at least 42 tonnes of water arrived in Israel and was already in the air - together with six other international aircraft from France, Turkey, Greece and Cyprus, Israeli fire services said.

The blaze is still concentrated between the village of Beit Oren and a major road linking Haifa with Tel Aviv to the south, as well as between the village of Usafiya and the village of Nir Etzion.

So far, according to the police, the number of fatalities is 41, while Israeli Radio reported 43 deaths including two police officers and a 16-year-old volunteer.

The dead teenager, identified as Elad Rebin, was trying to rescue prison service cadets whose bus had been trapped in the inferno Thursday night. Some 36 cadets on the bus were burned to death. The other dead were police officers, firemen, and a civilian.

Four Border Guard police officers were lightly hurt by smoke inhalation Saturday morning after being trapped near the northern community of Ein Hod. Four of them remain in hospital.

Officials late Friday said that the fire had destroyed more than 3,400 hectares of land, devoured over 4 million trees, and forced 17,000 people to flee their homes.

Some two days after the fire first began on the drought-stricken, heavily-forested Carmel hill, south-east of the city of Haifa, it is still defying efforts to bring it under control.

During the night the flames spread to the villages of Nir Ezion and Ein Hod, burning houses, and forcing police and firefighters to rescue residents who had not already fled.

However, firefighters managed to prevent the flames from reaching the Haifa suburb of Deniya, which lies on the south-eastern outskirts of the city, even though at one stage it was only one kilometer from the quarter's outlying streets.

The inferno also reached a hotel, and a wildlife reserve.

Spain, Egypt, Jordan, Croatia, Romania, Italy, Azerbaijan, Britain and the US are expected to send also aircraft, fire-retardant chemicals and other equipments. The Palestinian Authority said it had sent fire trucks.

Two other fires near the town of Ma'alot, about 40 kilometers north-east of the Carmel fire, and near the northern village of Basmat Tab'un erupted Saturday. The first was brought under control and in both cases police suspect arson.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/356543,police-3rd-update.html.

Israel 'saddened' as Brazil recognizes Palestinian state

JERUSALEM (AFP) -- Israel on Saturday said it was disappointed by Brazil's decision to recognize a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders, saying it flew in the face of efforts to negotiate a peace deal.

The decision was announced by outgoing Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in a public letter addressed to Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, which was made public by Brazil's foreign ministry Friday.

"The government of Israel expresses sadness and disappointment over the decision by the Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva a month before he steps down," a statement from the Israeli foreign ministry said.

"Recognition of a Palestinian state is a breach of the interim agreement which was signed between Israel and the Palestinian Authority 1995 which said that the issue of the status of the West Bank and Gaza Strip would be discussed and resolved through negotiations," it said.

Such a move also contravened the 2003 Middle East roadmap for peace, which said a Palestinian state could only be established through negotiations and not through unilateral actions, the statement said, warning that unilateral steps would harm attempts to build trust.

"Every attempt to bypass this process and to decide in advance in a unilateral manner about important issues which are disputed, only harms trust between the sides, and hurts their commitment to the agreed framework of negotiating towards peace."

Lula's letter was sent in response to a personal request made by Abbas on 24 November, the Brazilian document said.

The move by Brazil comes as peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians teetered on the brink of collapse following the end of a temporary ban on Jewish settlement building in the West Bank.

Abbas says he will not return to negotiations while Israel continues to build on land the Palestinians want for a future state. But Israel has so far refused to impose any new curb on settlement building.

Source: Ma'an News Agency.
Link: http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=338760.

PA closes TV station linked to Dahlan

04/12/2010

NABLUS (Ma'an) -- The Palestinian Authority has closed the offices of a Ramallah satellite TV station affiliated with Muhammad Dahlan, the once Fatah strongman who fled his native Gaza for the West Bank in 2007.

PA police raided the offices of Falastin Al-Ghad ("Palestine Tomorrow") and informed employees that it was closing. They said the closure was related to registration and other legal procedures, but did not elaborate. The employees, about 35 in total, were given paid vacation until a solution was worked out.

The station is owned by a number of Palestinian and Arab businessmen in addition to Palestinian leaders including Muhammad Dahlan. Its first transmission was delayed. Israel was accused of impeding the entry of equipment.

The station’s director is Ilias Zananiri.

Attorney Mousa Mansour, who represents the owner company Al-Mustaqbal, said Dahlan had nothing to do with Falastin Al-Ghad, neither is he one of its owners.

Mansour said the general manager of the station, Ehab Al-Ashqar, was summoned by the PA Interior Ministry on 1 December and handed the closure decision. He asserted that the station’s offices were not ransacked as the administration complied with the decision and evacuated employees until lawyers appealed.

Mansour also denied that the closure was related to registration or license issues highlighting that its license was received from the Interior Ministry last month.

The PA did not respond to requests for comment.

Source: Ma'an News Agency.
Link: http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=338711.

Ramallah FM confirms Brazillian state recognition

04/12/2010

RAMALLAH (Ma’an) -- Palestinian Foreign Minister for the Ramallah government Riyad Al-Maliki on Saturday confirmed statements made by PLO official Nabil Sha'ath announcing that Brazil had recognized a Palestinian state.

In a statement, Al-Maliki said the recognition came in a letter from Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to President Mahmoud Abbas through the foreign minister.

Source: Ma'an News Agency.
Link: http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=338644.

US lawmakers blast Brazil's Palestinian move

04/12/2010

WASHINGTON (AFP) -- US lawmakers condemned Brazil's "severely misguided" and "regrettable" decision Friday to recognize a Palestinian state on borders pre-dating Israel's seizure of the West Bank and Gaza in 1967.

Brazil's decision "is regrettable and will only serve to undermine peace and security in the Middle East," charged Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Ros-Lehtinen, set to chair the panel come January, said "responsible nations" would wait to take such a step until Palestinians return to direct talks with Israel and recognize its "right to exist as a Jewish state."

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva announced the decision Friday in a public letter addressed to Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas and published on the website of Brazil's foreign ministry.

The international community backs Palestinian demands for a state in most of the Gaza Strip, the West Bank and east Jerusalem, all territories occupied by Israel in the 1967 Six Day War.

But the United States and most Western governments have held back from recognizing a Palestinian state, saying it should be brought about through a negotiated peace agreement with Israel.

Brazil's decision also drew fire from Democratic Representative Eliot Engel, who said it "is severely misguided and represents a last gasp by a Lula-led foreign policy which was already substantially off track."

Engel tied the move to Lula's "coddling" of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and warned that Brazil "wants to establish itself as a voice in the world, but is making the wrong choices as it tries to do so."

"One can only hope that the new leadership coming into Brazil will change course and understand that this is not the way to gain favor as an emerging power or to become a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council."

Lula will be stepping down in four weeks' time and handing power over to Dilma Roussef, his protegee and former cabinet chief.

"Brazil is sending a message to the Palestinians that they need not make peace to gain recognition as a sovereign state," said Engel, a co-chair of the US Congress's Brazil Caucus.

The lawmaker added he remained "a strong supporter of Brazil as a dynamic, diverse democracy which will one day take its place alongside the world's leading nations."

Source: Ma'an News Agency.
Link: http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=338640.

Sarkozy receives credentials of first PA ambassador

04/12/2010

PARIS (Ma’an) -- French president Nikolas Sarkozy received credentials for the first Palestinian ambassador to France Hayil Al-Fahoum on Friday, following an upgrade to the status of the Palestinian mission in Paris in June.

In a summer move seen to support Prime Minister Salam Fayyad’s plan to establish a Palestinian state by 2012, Paris moved to change the status of the Palestinian general commission to a Palestine Mission.

Arab diplomatic sources said Sarkozy, when he accepted the credentials, stated the necessity of continuing the peace process in the Middle East, and applauded President Mahmoud Abbas' vision during the progress of the talks. He urged all sides to continue with the goal of establishing a viable Palestinian state living side by side with Israel in safety and security.

Al-Fahoum was previously the Palestinian representative in Germany and appointed the commissioner to the PLO office in Paris in 2010.

Source: Ma'an News Agency.
Link: http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=338615.

Recap: WikiLeaks faces more heat in the wake of cablegate

by Steve Ragan - Dec 4 2010

It’s been a long week for the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks. Problems started to mount after Amazon and EveryDNS forced them to shuffle their hosting. While this was happening, they also had to face political posturing and arrest warrants. The truth can be a dangerous and wonderful thing.

WikiLeaks had moved to Amazon after their site fell victim to a massive Distributed Denial of Service (DDOS) attack. The attack, peaking at 2 to 4 Gbps, was said to have originated from a single source. This source, Th3J35t3r, a self-titled ‘Hacktivist for good’, has been silent since word of his actions spread in the media.

The move to Amazon helped WikiLeaks remain online, but that was only the start of the problem. A day later politics entered the picture. Senator Joseph Lieberman is said to have called Amazon on December 1, to complain about their hosting of Wikileaks.

The assumption that Lieberman caused Amazon to boot WikiLeaks comes from a statement the Senator released that said in part, “After reading press reports that Amazon was hosting the Wikileaks website, Committee staff contacted Amazon Tuesday for an explanation.”

“[Amazon’s] decision to cut off Wikileaks now is the right decision and should set the standard for other companies Wikileaks is using to distribute its illegally seized material. I call on any other company or organization that is hosting Wikileaks to immediately terminate its relationship with them,” Lieberman’s statement added.

The French minister for industry, energy and digital economy, Eric Besson, seems to have jumped on Lieberman’s request. Reuters reported that he wrote a letter to CGIET, the agency that looks after internet use in France, looking for the means to block hosting for WikiLeaks in France. Shortly after getting the boot from Amazon, WikiLeaks moved to France’s OVH for hosting.

“The situation is unacceptable. France cannot host websites that violate diplomatic relations secrecy and endanger persons protected by diplomatic confidentiality. We cannot host sites that have been called criminal and rejected by other countries on the basis of harm to national rights,” Besson’s letter stated.

Amazon disputes the claims that they folded to political pressure, calling the reports “inaccurate”. Likewise, the reports that Amazon kicked WikiLeaks off their services due to DDOS attacks were inaccurate as well. “There were indeed large-scale DDOS attacks, but they were successfully defended against,” Amazon said.

“AWS does not pre-screen its customers, but it does have terms of service that must be followed. WikiLeaks was not following them….For example, our terms of service state that ‘you represent and warrant that you own or otherwise control all of the rights to the content… that use of the content you supply does not violate this policy and will not cause injury to any person or entity.’,” Amazon said in a statement.

“It’s clear that WikiLeaks doesn’t own or otherwise control all the rights to this classified content. Further, it is not credible that the extraordinary volume of 250,000 classified documents that WikiLeaks is publishing could have been carefully redacted in such a way as to ensure that they weren’t putting innocent people in jeopardy…when companies or people go about securing and storing large quantities of data that isn’t rightfully theirs, and publishing this data without ensuring it won’t injure others, it’s a violation of our terms of service, and folks need to go operate elsewhere.”

To some, this statement makes it clear that Amazon is folding to political pressure. However, they do have the right as a business to follow their own rules, so terms of service violations are a valid reason to end a business relationship. Yet, in the U.S. the First Amendment to the Constitution protects WikiLeaks. It also protects Amazon.

The EFF, in a blog post, called the move unfortunate. “Indeed, Amazon has its own First Amendment right to do so. That makes it all the more unfortunate that Amazon caved to unofficial government pressure to squelch core political speech. Amazon had an opportunity to stand up for its customer's right to free expression. Instead, Amazon ran away with its tail between its legs.”

“While it's frustrating to think of any hosting provider cutting services to a website because it considers the content too politically volatile or controversial, it's especially disheartening to see Amazon knuckle under to pressure from a single senator. Other Internet intermediaries should now expect to receive a phone call when some other member of Congress is unhappy with speech they are hosting. After all, it worked on Amazon.”

Another contradiction to Amazon’s claims comes from both the State Department and WikiLeaks. The U.S. government flatly refused to help WikiLeaks when asked for information that would be used to strip the cables of names, in an attempt to prevent harm.

Shortly after moving from Amazon to OVH, WikiLeaks again faced connection issues. EveryDNS, the free DNS offering of DYN Inc., cut DNS services after ongoing DDOS attacks threatened the stability of the service.

“…wikileaks.org has become the target of multiple distributed denial of service (DDOS) attacks. These attacks have, and future attacks would, threaten the stability of the EveryDNS.net infrastructure, which enables access to almost 500,000 other websites,” a statement said.

Earlier today, DYN Inc added to their original statement, noting that the issue is a difficult one to deal with. “EveryDNS.net, the world’s largest free managed DNS provider, is not taking a position on the content hosted on the wikileaks.org or wikileaks.ch website, it is following established policies so as not to put any one EveryDNS.net user’s interests ahead of any others.”

The DNS outage, DYN Inc. added was due to WikiLeaks not switching DNS providers within the amount of time between the first notice of termination and the actual severance.

Compounding WikiLeaks’ issues with hosting are the legal problems faced by Julian Assange, the founder of the infamous organization. Earlier this week, Interpol issued a Red Notice for Assange. The Red Notice says that his offence is sex crime related and that the warrant was issued by the International Public Prosecution Office in Gothenburg, Sweden.

The move was called a persecution and not a prosecution, by Assange’s lawyer, Mark Stephens in a statement.

“Mr. Assange has repeatedly sought meetings with the Prosecutrix - both in Sweden and subsequently - in order to answer her questions and clear his name...Bizarrely, the Prosecutrix - having ignored or rejected those offers of voluntary cooperation - instead sought an arrest warrant to have Mr. Assange held incommunicado without giving his Swedish lawyer sufficient notice, access to evidence or information to take proper instructions from Mr. Assange. This action is all the more peculiar as she has not even issued a formal summons for his interrogation or brought charges against Mr. Assange,” the statement said.

“In 28 years of practice I have never come across a prosecutor, whether in the third world or even in a totalitarian regime, where there has been such casual disregard by a prosecutor for their obligations. Given that Sweden is a civilised country I am reluctantly forced to conclude that this is a persecution and not a prosecution.”

On Friday, Assange’s Sweedish lawyer, Bjorn Hurtig told Reuters that he would fight any extradition order that seeks to send him back to Sweden over alleged sex crimes.

“If it is in a country where they speak English, I know that my co-counsel Mark Stephens will help me in fighting this extradition order and he will do so vigorously,” Hurtig told Reuters, adding that they are discussing what to do, but one thing that makes the situation harder are the threats against Assange’s life.

Assange has been in an undisclosed location since the cablegate leaks started, after death threats were made against him. Offers by Assange to speak with Swedish authorities at an embassy abroad have been rejected. The comments on extradition are due to Swedish authorities issuing a new warrant for Assange’s arrest. The new warrant was needed due to procedural errors in the first warrant. To date, Julian Assange has not been charged. He denies the sex crime allegations, calling the actions a smear campaign against him.

“I think somebody has an interest in getting Julian to Sweden and maybe asking for him to be extradited to another country (from there),” Hurtig speculated.

While the warrants and legal bickering over Assange moved forward this week, Senator Joseph Lieberman made headlines a second time with his so-called SHIELD Act (Securing Human Intelligence and Enforcing Lawful Dissemination).

On Thursday, Senators John Ensign, Joe Lieberman, and Scott Brown introduced the legislation, calling the amendment to the Espionage Act something that “…will help derail the very real threat posed to human intelligence sources by WikiLeaks.”

“Julian Assange and his cronies, in their effort to hinder our war efforts, are creating a hit list for our enemies by publishing the names of our human intelligence sources,” said Ensign. “…I simply will not stand idly by as they become death targets because of Julian Assange. Let me be very clear, WikiLeaks is not a whistleblower website and Assange is not a journalist.”

Lieberman added to those statements with “This legislation will help hold people criminally accountable who endanger these sources of information that are vital to protecting our national security interests.”

Wired’s Kevin Poulsen made a valid point when he noted that the SHIELD Act is aimed squarely at publishers.

“Lieberman’s proposed solution to WikiLeaks could have implications for journalists reporting on some of the more unsavory practices of the intelligence community. For example, former Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega was once a paid CIA asset. Would reporting that now be a crime?”

Congressman Ron Paul voiced his thoughts when he Tweeted, “In a free society, we are supposed to know the truth. In a society where truth becomes treason, we are in big trouble.”

The ACLU weighed in on reports of legal action by the U.S. by noting that they were “deeply skeptical” that prosecuting WikiLeaks would be constitutional, or a good idea.

“The courts have made clear that the First Amendment protects independent third parties who publish classified information. Prosecuting WikiLeaks would be no different from prosecuting the media outlets that also published classified documents,” Hina Shamsi, the Director of the ACLU’s National Security Project said in a statement.

“If newspapers could be held criminally liable for publishing leaked information about government practices, we might never have found out about the CIA’s secret prisons or the government spying on innocent Americans. Prosecuting publishers of classified information threatens investigative journalism that is necessary to an informed public debate about government conduct, and that is an unthinkable outcome.”

In the aforementioned EFF blog posting, they touched on this topic as well, reminding anyone reading that the government itself “…can't take official action to silence WikiLeaks' ongoing publications - that would be an unconstitutional prior restraint, or censorship of speech before it can be communicated to the public.”

“No government actor can nix WikiLeaks' right to publish content any more than the government could stop the New York Times and Washington Post from publishing the Pentagon Papers, which were also stolen secret government documents.”

When it comes to access itself, there have been several organizations moving to block access to WikiLeaks, including The Library of Congress, according to Talking Points Memo.

“The Library of Congress has blocked access to the Wikileaks site on its staff computers and on the wireless network that visitors use,” TPM said in their report.

In a statement, the LC told TPM that the block is “…because applicable law obligates federal agencies to protect classified information. Unauthorized disclosures of classified documents do not alter the documents' classified status or automatically result in declassification of the documents.”

We’ll keep following the latest in the cablegate saga. In the meantime, feel free to weigh in with your opinions on WikiLeaks.

As a final thought, what are your opinions on the remarks by Pravda, who points out how hypocritical the U.S. is being with all of the drama surrounding cablegate?

“It is the American people who should be outraged that its government has transformed a nation with a reputation for freedom, justice, tolerance and respect for human rights into a backwater that revels in its criminality, cover-ups, injustices and hypocrisies.”

As noted by Mike Masnick at Techdirt, “It's pretty sad when Pravda is lecturing the US on free speech, tolerance and respect for human rights.”

Source: The Tech Herald.
Link: http://www.thetechherald.com/article.php/201048/6505/Recap-WikiLeaks-faces-more-heat-in-the-wake-of-cablegate.

France moves to ban WikiLeaks from using French servers

December 04, 2010

Industry Minister Eric Besson wrote a letter to business and technology leaders on Friday calling for ways to ban WikiLeaks from using servers in France, local media reported.

"I ask you to indicate to me as soon as possible what action can be taken to ensure that this Internet site is no longer hosted in France," Besson wrote in the letter.

"France cannot host an Internet site that violates the secrecy of diplomatic relations and endangers people," the letter added.

The letter was addressed to the French General Board of Industry, Energy and Technology, demanding concerning organizations and leaders to stop WikiLeaks from using the facilities of French company OVH located in the northern region.

So far WikiLeaks has let out some 250,000 U.S. diplomacy cables, which has irritated Washington so much that U.S. Amazon stopped hosting for the "violator" on Thursday.

The French government declared after the disclosure by WikiLeaks that U.S.-French relations would not be harmed in the wake of the incident, reaffirming its "solidarity" with the U.S. administration.

Previous reports said WikiLeaks was forced Friday to switch to a Swiss domain name, wikileaks.ch, since its U.S. domain continued being attacked until the U.S. domain provider withdrew service.

Source: People's Daily.
Link: http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90777/90853/7220892.html.

Bill Wants All Farms—Big & Small—Under Control of Military

ON NOV. 30, THE SENATE overwhelmingly passed the Food Safety Modernization Act (S. 510) by a vote of 73 to 25. The intent of the legislation is to give the federal government the power to shut down unsafe food providers, such as the massive Iowa chicken factory farm that was at the center of a nationwide recall of a half-billion eggs. However, critics argue that the bill imposes radical and onerous restrictions on all food providers, including small farms and even makers of nutritional supplements.

AFP first detailed this story in the Nov. 15 issue, calling it “the most sweeping update of food safety rules in the United States in more than 50 years.” Critics of the bill have blasted the measure as one of most dangerous pieces of legislation to ever be introduced in Congress, since it addresses the most important thing for human life next to clean water—that is, the quality of food we eat.

As we noted earlier, in the event of some unspecified “national emergency,” the bill will put all farms and all food under the direct control of the Homeland Security Department and the Department of Defense. The biggest concern is that this will lead to rationing and other controls of food. We know what happened in communist countries when food produced on farms was collected up by armed soldiers and redistributed around the country. The common folk in Eastern Europe, Russia and China all suffered through decades of government-induced famines, while most of the food went to feed the soldiers and leaders in their war machines.

The good news is that advocacy groups have been working with legislators to eliminate some of the worst aspects of the bill. No longer does the bill impose on food a global system of compliance in line with the World Trade Organization. Also, makers of nutritional supplements will not face 10 years in prison for failing to meet the bizarre and complicated requirements set by the Food and Drug Administration.

Finally, the Alliance for Natural Health USA (ANHUSA) worked to exclude small businesses and local and organic farms from some of the worst standards that would be enacted under this bill.

In a press release put out in late November, ANHUSA wrote: “We do not think the Senate food safety bill will make food safer; quite the contrary. At least we have succeeded in removing the very worst parts of it.”

The bill now goes to committee where senators and congressmen will try to reach some compromise bill. There still is a possibility that this new compromise bill will not pass. AFP will keep watching the measure as the lame-duck session continues.

Source: American Free Press.
Link: http://www.americanfreepress.net/html/all_farms_military_247.html.

X-37B US miltary spaceplane returns to Earth

3 December 2010

By Paul Rincon
Science reporter, BBC News

A prototype spaceplane built for the US military has returned to Earth after seven months in orbit.

The unpiloted X-37B touched down at Vandenberg Air Force base in California at 0116 PST (0916 GMT).

The project has been shrouded in secrecy, prompting widespread speculation about the craft's purpose.

The Air Force has not said whether it carried anything in its cargo bay, but insists the primary purpose of the mission was to test the craft itself.

Officials have said the X-37B could be used to carry out experiments in orbit.

The robotic X-37B was launched atop an Atlas 5 rocket from Florida's Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on 22 April, with a maximum mission duration of 270 days.

"We are very pleased that the program completed all the on-orbit objectives for the first mission," the project's program manager Lt Col Troy Giese said in a statement.

Jeremy Eggers, an Air Force spokesman based at Vandenberg said the craft is expected to return to space in Spring 2011.

At 8.9m (29ft 3ins) long and with a 4.5m (14ft 11ins) wingspan, the reusable spaceplane is about one-quarter the size of the space shuttle, with a large engine mounted at the rear of the ship for changing orbit.

While the space shuttle uses a fuel-cell power-system, the military vehicle is powered by a solar array and lithium-ion batteries.

The Boeing-built spacecraft returned to Earth on "auto-pilot"; the successful return marks the first autonomous re-entry and landing in the recorded history of the US space program.

Because the X-37B (also known as the Orbital Test Vehicle, OTV-1) started life as a Nasa program, the Air Force is in a position to talk openly about the craft's design, but its precise purpose remains classified.

The secrecy surrounding the project has prompted much speculation about uses to which the craft might be put.

In April, Gary Payton, the Air Force's deputy undersecretary for space programs, sought to allay worries about the X-37B and the potential weaponisation of space.

"I don't know how this could be called weaponisation of space. It's just an updated version of the space shuttle type of activities in space," he said.

"We, the Air Force, have a suite of military missions in space and this new vehicle could potentially help us do those missions better."

But some countries could be unsettled by speculation the craft might be capable of inspecting foreign military satellites.

According to amateur satellite watchers, who have been tracking the experimental vehicle since its launch, the craft changed its orbital path around six times.

Some of those skywatchers have also claimed that characteristics of the X-37B's orbit are shared with spy satellites that carry out imaging reconnaissance, as well as scientific remote sensing spacecraft.

Earlier this year, Ted Molczan, a key member in the amateur network, told BBC News the X-37B was "repeating its tracks". This pattern allows some satellites to pass over the same area of ground every few days and so re-visit a target of interest, he said.

Source: British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
Link: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11911335.

PayPal Announces It Will No Longer Handle Wikileaks Donations

By Audrey Watters / December 3, 2010

In the latest in a series of blows to Wikileaks, PayPal says it will no longer support money transfers to the whistleblower site.

PayPal has posted a (late-night) statement to its website, saying: "PayPal has permanently restricted the account used by WikiLeaks due to a violation of the PayPal Acceptable Use Policy, which states that our payment service cannot be used for any activities that encourage, promote, facilitate or instruct others to engage in illegal activity. We've notified the account holder of this action."

PayPal's announcement follows Wikileaks' loss of its DNS server today and its ousting from Amazon Web Services earlier this week. This comes on the heels of the recent release by Wikileaks of another round of leaked documents - 250,000 U.S. diplomatic cables.

PayPal isn't the only way to donate to Wikileaks. You can make a bank transfer or send money directly by mail. But certainly sending money online via PayPal has become one of the easiest and most routine ways for folks to make all sorts of online donations.

It's not the first time Wikileaks has run into trouble with PayPal either, as the organization had its account temporarily frozen earlier this year.

PayPal's announcement will certainly result in a loss of donation dollars for Wikileaks. But it also marks an important symbolic loss for the organization as well, as it represents yet another major private tech company that has closed its doors to Wikileaks. In addition to those who've refused to provide Wikileaks with hosting and financial services, the visualization company Tableau Software also expunged all Wikileaks content from its site.

Although these companies have said that their terms of service forbid the support or facilitation of illegal activity, such pronouncements about Wikileaks are debatable. While it is a crime to leak classified information, receiving and publishing it is not.

Source: Read Write Web.
Link: http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/paypal_announces_it_will_no_longer_handle_wikileak.php.

Jordan: Talks must be rescued for peace

04/12/2010

MANAMA, Bahrain (AFP) -- Jordan's King Abdullah II said on Saturday that Israeli-Palestinian peace talks must be rescued from collapse to ensure regional and world stability.

"Our region will not enjoy security and stability unless we solve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and Arabs, Muslims and Israelis find peace," the king told the Manama Dialogue conference in Bahrain, a major international gathering on regional security.

"If hope is killed, radical forces will prevail. The region will sink into more vicious warfare and instability, threatening security far beyond the borders of the Middle East," he warned.

"This is why it is essential that we rescue the new round of negotiations between the Palestinians and Israel," he said of direct pace talks launched in September in Washington.

The talks have ground to a halt as Israel refused Palestinian demands to impose a new moratorium on settlement construction in the occupied West Bank.

A 10-month freeze expired on September 26, shortly after the launch of the latest round of negotiations.

King Abdullah said "the building of settlements has to stop," and he urged Israeli and Palestinian negotiators to resume "serious negotiations" on all pending issues namely borders, security and refugees.

"Only through such serious negotiations, will we get to the end game: An independent and viable Palestinian state, living side by side a secure Israel, that is accepted and accepting, in a region of peace.

"The alternative is new conflicts that will reverberate far beyond the borders of the Middle East. Conflicts that will threaten the strategic national interests of the United States, Europe and the rest of us in the international community.

"The world has already been dragged into regional conflicts. And it will certainly be involved in new confrontations, that will erupt in this environment of frustration and tension," he added.

The annual Manama Dialogue is organized by the London-based International Institute of Strategic Studies and was formally opened on Friday night by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Clinton has said Washington is "working intensively" to break the impasse in Palestinian-Israeli talks.

Source: Ma'an News Agency.
Link: http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=338676.

News Analysis: Hamas' call for referendum in case of making peace with Israel indicates flexibility

by Osma Radi, Omer Othmani

GAZA, Dec. 3 (Xinhua) -- The recent declaration of Islamic Hamas movement that it suggests holding a referendum in case of reaching peace with Israel, is another indication of the movement' s flexibility to be part of the Middle East peace process.

Palestinian observers see that Hamas has been attempting over the past several years to be more pragmatic and flexible towards opening a direct dialogue with the west and get a place in the political map, however, the group's step is slow and reluctant.

This week, the deposed prime minister of Hamas Ismail Haneya told the visiting foreign media in Gaza that Hamas would accept holding a referendum in case of any peace agreement that the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) and Israel would reach.

He also point out that "even if the results of the public referendum contradicts with Hamas strategy, we would accept it and be committed it," adding that his movement accepts a Palestinian state to be established on the occupied territories after 1967 war.

HAMAS TRIES TO END ISOLATION

Hamas, which is isolated by the international community because it rejects to recognize Israel and denounce violence, had earlier announced that it is against holding a public referendum in case of reaching a permanent peace agreement with Israel, depending on the principle "no referendum on stable rights."

Khalil Shain, a political analyst and writer based in the West Bank told Xinhua that the recent position of Hamas aims at sending messages to the world, mainly the United States that Hamas is not a terrorist organization. It shows flexible stances and the isolation of the movement must end.

"I could say that the recent stances of Hamas aim at joining in the peace process of future," Shahin said, "Hamas is seeking to open direct dialogue with the West to gain external political supports."

DIFFERENT STRATEGIES WITH PNA

Other observers believe that Hamas, which strongly seeks to open channels of direct dialogue with western countries, is pursuing a different style from the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) in ruling the peace process.

Hani Habib, a Gaza-based political analyst told Xinhua that Hamas' readiness to accept a referendum on any peace deal with Israel "is a frank turn in its positions towards the internal conflict and the peace process," indicating that Haneya's declaration "is not gaining a full support of Hamas."

"The timing of Haneya's declaration is really odd. He made it while the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks are stalling, which means that Hamas is presenting itself as an alternative as a peace partner and will hold a direct dialogue with the West," said Habib.

Fatah movement led by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, the bitter rival of Hamas has accused the Islamic movement of trying to contact with the EU and the United States, planning to start a direct dialogue with the West and be an alternative to Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).

Hamas, which was founded in Gaza in Dec. 1987, is listed by the U.S. and European countries as terrorist organizations and that its charter calls for the destruction of Israel. However, observers ruled out the possibilities that Hamas would soon join the Middle East peace process.

Talal Oukal, another Gaza-based political analyst told Xinhua that Hamas' position and its policy "still don't promote to the level of being accepted comparing characteristics of the PLO", noting that "there are many obstacles that would block Hamas from joining the peace process."

Oukal believes that the current flexibility of Hamas towards opening a dialogue with the West and join the peace process " should also help in achieving the reconciliation with Fatah movement amid the political division between the two groups over reaching a permanent peace deal with Israel."

Source: Xinhua.
Link: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2010-12/04/c_13634294.htm.